Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
---|---|---|
MUSICPOP 1850-SM Online |
Dreams a reverie / Ossian's serenade as sung by Ossian E. Dodge at most of his fashionable entertainments throughout the union / |
2 |
MUSICPOP 1851 |
Joe Hardy. Go where honor. Forget me not. Farewell my Lilly dear. Cradle song. Children pray this love to cherish. Minnie Clyde. Poor old slave. |
10 |
MUSICPOP 1851-D |
Comin' thro' the rye : Scotch ballad / The canary bird / The dumb wife : comic song / Farewell old cottage / How can I leave thee : a German melody / |
5 |
MUSICPOP 1851-SM | Take this lute / | 1 |
MUSICPOP 1852 |
Dear love to be about thee. Maggie by my side. And the king said to all the people. Massa's in de cold ground. Song of peace. I cannot sing to-night. |
7 |
MUSICPOP 1852-D |
Columbia, the land of the brave / The Green Mountain yankee : a temperance medley / I dreamt that I dwelt in marble halls / Eliza's flight : a scene from Uncle Tom's cabin / |
4 |
MUSICPOP 1853 |
Little Katy : hot corn. The friends we've left behind. Slave girl's lave. Lulu is our darling pride. Something to love me. Old dog tray. Friends we've left behind. |
7 |
MUSICPOP 1853-D |
Ella Ree : a new Ethiopian melody as sung with immense success by Wood's Minstrels / Call me pet names / Hour of parting : duett / Cheer boys cheer / Annie my own love : song / Aileen aroon / |
6 |
MUSICPOP 1853-SM |
Softly ye night winds : ballad written and composed as a companion to Sleeping I dreamed love / Thou hast wounded the spirit that lov'd thee : an admired ballad / |
2 |
MUSICPOP 1853-SM Online |
Thou hast wounded the spirit that lov'd thee an admired ballad / Softly ye night winds ballad written and composed as a companion to Sleeping I dreamed love / |
2 |
MUSICPOP 1854 |
Tis hard to give the hand. In the spring sweetly sing. Minnie. Kitty Clyde. Good news from home. Napoleon's farewell. Other side of Jordan. Charlie. Come with thy sweet voice again : song / Sad news from home. Close by the sparkling sea. Ellen Bayne. Arouse ye men of England! |
13 |
MUSICPOP 1854-D |
Black eyed Susan : a favorite sea song as sung with rapturous applause by Mrs. Wood / Come with thy sweet voice again : song / |
2 |
MUSICPOP 1854-SM |
I cannot sing to night : ballad / Switzer's longing for home / |
2 |
MUSICPOP 1854-SM Online |
I cannot sing to night ballad / Switzer's longing for home |
2 |
MUSICPOP 1855 |
Partant pour la Syrie. Sebastopol is taken. Absent but not forgotten. Some folks. Rosalie the prairie flower. I've wandered by the hut side. King Witlaf's drinking horn. Our good old friends. My old Kentucky home, goodnight! Pop goes the question! Ivy Green. Thinking of old times. She watched for him. My heart's on the Rhine. Lillie Dale. He's coming hame again. Consider the lillies. Massa's in de cold ground. Arrow & the song. The departure for Syria = Partant pour la Syrie : romance / |
20 |
MUSICPOP 1855-D |
To the west! / I cannot call her mother : ballad / Dearest spot of earth to me is home / Co-ca-che-lunk : an American student-song. Come where my love lies dreaming : quartette / Britannia the pride of the ocean / |
6 |
MUSICPOP 1855-D Online | To the west! | 1 |
MUSICPOP 1856 |
When summer flowers are blowing. Far from my native land. Tis thus decreed. Then you'll remember me. Home to our mountains. Darling Nellie Gray. Wake sweetest melody. |
7 |
MUSICPOP 1856-D |
The fisherman's daughter : ballad / Ever of thee : arranged as a song or duett / The western trapper's camp song / Home! sweet home! / The beating of my own heart : song / |
5 |
MUSICPOP 1856-D Online | The western trapper's camp song | 1 |